I needed to get to Jan 1 on my taters, but even with frost covers they got fried. Everything else is rolling. Carrots, kohlrabi, cabbage, broccoli, spinach, celery, beets, Hakurai turnips, onions and garlic. Nice stretch of normal temps coming at us. Your stuff looks good.
I have my garden beds covered with several layers of plastic in Southern Indiana zone 7A. I’m taking the plastic off tomorrow for a week before I have to recover them right before Christmas. I have more growing in my greenhouse and indoors in my grow tent.
Hey Trav I would love to see a colab with mama Hoss and the kiddos installing a roselle hibiscus patch in the raised beds. And then a follow up video with you and the kiddos making dome of that great roselle hibiscus tea. Great video sir. Can’t wait till it warms up here in New Mexico and I can start planting.
Live Drones Over New Jersey #livefeed. Nice LIONS game, AND Ar$e kicking, Sunday. B-Slapping on Packers, previous, Thursday. Pencil it in. And thank you for your web advice.
Unfortunately, here in kentucky, it is just too cold to really grow anything unless you have a greenhouse. I have four rows of garlic growing, but that's it
It's a little late to establish them, but there are a few plants you could try. The range of stuff you can plant will be extended if you use covers to protect them from the wind and the open sky. I have perennial green onions that yield year round here in northwest Arkansas (just barely in zone seven). I have had collards and turnips survive -20F. I plant winter wheat most years--it's hardy to -40F, though you won't get a crop until June.
I planted English peas in October my plants look good but they just seem to have gotten to a certain maturity and just stopped they haven’t changed a bit in two weeks
My parsley survived three below zero uncovered, last winter. After that, parsley and garlic had the garden all to themselves.
Thank you, Lazy Dog Farm‼️❄️🌞
Appreciate the info here in the South Carolina Lowcountry!! We are much like you for growing.
Up here we are hunkered down for the winter but we can watch your channel and dream!
Keeping a living root in the soil is one of the 6 regenerative principles.
I needed to get to Jan 1 on my taters, but even with frost covers they got fried. Everything else is rolling. Carrots, kohlrabi, cabbage, broccoli, spinach, celery, beets, Hakurai turnips, onions and garlic. Nice stretch of normal temps coming at us. Your stuff looks good.
The code definitely still works. I already ordered my seed taters and always use your code.
I have my garden beds covered with several layers of plastic in Southern Indiana zone 7A. I’m taking the plastic off tomorrow for a week before I have to recover them right before Christmas. I have more growing in my greenhouse and indoors in my grow tent.
Hey Trav I would love to see a colab with mama Hoss and the kiddos installing a roselle hibiscus patch in the raised beds. And then a follow up video with you and the kiddos making dome of that great roselle hibiscus tea. Great video sir. Can’t wait till it warms up here in New Mexico and I can start planting.
Live Drones Over New Jersey #livefeed.
Nice LIONS game, AND Ar$e kicking, Sunday. B-Slapping on Packers, previous, Thursday.
Pencil it in. And thank you for your web advice.
I am still flabbergasted that my collard greens are still alive from last spring... such a strange year here in Central Oklahoma
Strange year everywhere! 🙃
Wait?? Voodoo wand?? Have I missed something in a past video??
Thank you. Question, who is the manufacturer of your High Tunnel?
Big fan love your videos!!! I live in Monroe ga . A little bit north of you. Any suggestions for that region?
When can you Plant in Unionville Va 7A or B
Unfortunately, here in kentucky, it is just too cold to really grow anything unless you have a greenhouse. I have four rows of garlic growing, but that's it
It's a little late to establish them, but there are a few plants you could try. The range of stuff you can plant will be extended if you use covers to protect them from the wind and the open sky. I have perennial green onions that yield year round here in northwest Arkansas (just barely in zone seven). I have had collards and turnips survive -20F. I plant winter wheat most years--it's hardy to -40F, though you won't get a crop until June.
What about asparagus?
I planted English peas in October my plants look good but they just seem to have gotten to a certain maturity and just stopped they haven’t changed a bit in two weeks
But... I don't want to go outside in the booger freezing cold!